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15,077 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account".
  • Large-cap indexes like the S&P 500 continue to hang in there, but under the market’s hood, the selling in leading stocks that began three weeks ago has intensified, with many now showing abnormal action. Most fast-moving stocks are in a correction, and that’s enough for us to switch our Market Monitor to neutral, meaning you should limit new buying and raise some cash. That said, we’re not making any bold predictions; we’ve seen these rotations out of growth stocks before, and they often reverse themselves quickly. But right now, it’s best to pull in your horns and wait for leading stocks to find support.

    Despite the carnage in certain sectors, we’re encouraged by this week’s list—there are many solid stories here, not just defensive or mega-cap names. Our Top Pick is Nabors Industries (NBR), one of a few energy stocks that are acting well.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Zulily (ZU) 0.0052-5645-48
    Zillow (Z) 76.6492-9585-86
    WhiteWave Foods (WWAV) 0.0027-28.525-26
    SanDisk Corp. (SNDK) 0.0078-8073-74
    Nabors Industries (NBR) 0.0022.5-23.520-20.5
    Kate Spade & Company (KATE) 0.0037-3933-34
    First Solar (FSLR) 83.7468-7260-62
    Finisar (FNSR) 0.0026-27.523.5-24
    E-Commerce China Dangdang (DANG) 0.0014-15.512-12.5
    Activision Blizzard, Inc. (ATVI) 0.0020-2118-18.5

  • The biotech sector is in full recovery mode, and the best biotech stocks are still on sale. Here’s where you can find them.
  • By their nature, turnaround stocks involve a fair amount of risk. One way to help reduce that risk is to find out-of-favor stocks that offer high dividend yields. This puts hard cash in your pocket while you wait for the turnaround to take effect.

    In this issue, we list six additional out-of-favor stocks that have high dividend yields which we believe are sustainable and also have turnaround potential:
  • Market Gauge is 8Current Market Outlook


    It’s been a tricky few weeks, but by our measures, the intermediate-term trend of the major indexes has turned up, which is a sign to increase your exposure to the market’s leading stocks (preferably on pullbacks). And there are a lot of leaders to choose from! In particular, the growth stocks that bounced nicely off the market’s early-February low continue to perform excellently, displaying powerful and persistent action, which usually indicates more upside is in store (albeit with normal pullbacks and shakeouts along the way). We’re not viewing this as a blastoff, but more of a resumption of the market’s longer-term uptrend. Our Market Monitor moves up a couple of notches into bullish territory.

    This week’s list is another one that’s filled with enticing growth stories and strong charts. There are a ton of good stocks to choose from, but we’re going with TD Ameritrade (AMTD) as our Top Pick, as it’s one of the strongest Bull Market stocks out there today.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Ligand Pharmaceuticals (LGND) 267.14173-178158-162
    Micron Technology, Inc. (MU) 43.3156-6051-53
    Palo Alto Networks (PANW) 236.92181-187166-170
    Qualys (QLYS) 0.0074-7768-70
    Sarepta Therapeutics (SRPT) 120.9373-7764.5-67.5
    TD Ameritrade (AMTD) 0.0060-6355-57
    Teladoc, Inc. (TDOC) 127.9537-38.536.5-38
    Twitter (TWTR) 40.3732.5-34.529-30
    Western Digital Corporation (WDC) 0.0096-10089-91
    Zillow (Z) 76.6453-55.548.5-50

  • After weeks of ping-pong action, the sellers have finally taken control for the first time since last fall: The intermediate-term of the major indexes has turned down and the broad market has done the same, with more than two-thirds of all stocks now south of their 50-day lines. It’s the same when it comes to leaders—for weeks they had found support at key levels, but now most have cracked intermediate-term trend lines, including the key chip sector, which keeled over this week.
  • Market Gauge is 5Current Market Outlook


    We can’t complain about the market’s action recently—the major indexes have (at the very least) held the strong gains of the past couple of weeks, with the strongest among them (like the Nasdaq) pushing higher. And many individual stocks (especially growth stocks) look vibrant, which is a plus. That said, we can’t conclude that the bulls are back in control, as most major indexes are still hovering around their 50-day lines, and in the broad market, the number of stocks hitting new highs (even on the strong Nasdaq) remains very low. We’re close to an all-clear signal, and think it’s fine for you to hold your strong stocks and do a little buying here or there. But right now, we’re keeping our Market Monitor at neutral until we see confirmation of an uptrend.

    This week’s list has a ton of good stories and charts, with growth stocks well represented. It’s hard to pick just one, but we’ll go with Red Hat (RHT), which looks like a big-cap leader of the leading software group.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Arch Coal (ARCH) 82.2795-9987-89
    GoDaddy (GDDY) 0.0058-6153-55
    MuleSoft (MULE) 0.0028.5-30.526-27.5
    Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) 423.92280-290255-260
    Planet Fitness (PLNT) 0.0034-36.531-32.5
    Red Hat (RHT) 0.00142-148130-134
    TAL Education (TAL) 50.4935-3732-33
    Twilio (TWLO) 183.3931.5-33.528-29.5
    Vale S.A. (VALE) 15.4013.7-14.512.6-13
    Zendesk (ZEN) 82.1940.5-42.536.5-38

  • Most sector and country funds usually include a major index as a benchmark, the bar that the fund uses to decide whether it’s had a good year or not. But is beating an index really a sufficiently ambitious goal to aim for?
  • The market has been bouncy but slightly higher for the year so far, but it’s a different story under the hood.

    Eight of the eleven S&P stock sectors are outperforming the market, and none of them is technology. That’s a stark difference from most of this bull market, where technology and AI drove the market higher while most other sectors underperformed. Now, the rally is broadening.

    The market isn’t as expensive as it may seem, as the valuations of many stocks are below that of the overall market and don’t reflect the index returns of the bull market so far. Most of the expensive stocks are in technology, but those stocks are getting cheaper as well.

    In this issue, I highlight two of the most promising dividend stocks for 2026. Both stocks have been in the portfolio before and have provided great income and total returns in a short period of time. They also can generate huge call premiums.
  • Market Gauge is 8Current Market Outlook


    Ever since the mini-blowoff we saw in growth stocks in mid June, the market has been choppy, narrow and tough to maneuver, with many individual stocks going nowhere and a handful of leaders flashing abnormal intermediate-term action. But the character of the market seems to have changed during the past couple of weeks—the day-to-day rotation is gone, leading growth stocks have generally resumed their advances and the major indexes have moved to new highs. It’s still not 1999 out there, of course, and a big factor will be how the market reacts once big investors return from the beach next week. But there’s no question the evidence continues to improve, so we’re bumping up our Market Monitor to a level 8 (out of 10).

    This week’s list has a bunch of good setups and great breakouts from growth-oriented stocks. Our Top Pick is Pure Storage (PSTG), which looks like it has recovered from the choppy action of the past few quarters.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Autodesk (ADSK) 229.00150-155137-140
    DocuSign (DOCU) 107.9863-6655-57
    Horizon Therapeutics (HZNP) 49.8919.5-20.517.5-18.5
    Nordstrom Inc (JWN) 60.7258-6153.5-55.5
    Novocure (NVCR) 0.0038-4033-34
    PetIQ (PETQ) 30.8235.5-3830-31.5
    Pure Storage (PSTG) 25.6425-26.522.5-23.5
    SailPoint Technologies (SAIL) 31.6029-3126.5-27.5
    Splunk (SPLK) 207.67117-122105-108
    Williams-Sonoma (WSM) 64.9666-6961-62.5

  • In today’s note, we discuss the recent earnings reports from Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA). Our note also includes the monthly Catalyst Report and a summary of the January edition of the Cabot Turnaround Letter, which was published a week ago Wednesday.
  • The stock market is clearly accelerating the “reopening” trade. Small cap and cyclical stocks as well as commodity prices are surging, interest rates continue to tick up (the 10-year Treasury yield is now 1.38%, up from 0.92% at year-end), and novel financial vehicles like SPACs, Bitcoin and Reddit are attracting a stunning amount of attention. With the government plying the market with endless quantities of free money (drinks?), investors are giddy and going “all in.” The pot is now huge.
  • While I don’t think we just saw the end of the run-up in technology stocks, I do think investors should begin to pare back their tech holdings and do these two things: raise cash, and buy undervalued stocks in other sectors.
  • This week, we comment on earnings from Conduent (CNDT), Ironwood Pharmaceuticals (IRWD), Organon (OGN), Toshiba (TOSYY) and TreeHouse Foods (THS).
  • From StreetAuthority Stock of the Month: “Between 1979 and 2007, the average after-tax income of the richest 1% of Americans rose 281%, from $347,000 to $1.3 million—far surpassing the gains of every other income group. ... Estimates...